Malaysia Airlines Passenger Jet Shot down in Ukraine, Reports Say

Cotton

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Malaysia Airlines Passenger Jet Crashes in Ukraine, Reports Say
BY ALEXANDER SMITH, ALASTAIR JAMIESON AND ERIN MCCLAM

A Malaysia Airlines jet with 295 people on board crashed in Ukraine near the Russian border on Thursday, according to the Interfax news agency, and an adviser to the Ukrainian government said that it had been shot down.

The reports could not immediately be confirmed by NBC News, but Malaysia Airlines said on its Twitter account that it had lost contact with an aircraft, Flight 17 from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur. A Reuters correspondent in eastern Ukraine reported seeing the burning wreckage of a plane and bodies on the ground.


More than four months ago, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board, disappeared in the greatest mystery in modern aviation. Multi-nation searches of swaths of land and ocean have turned up no sign of that aircraft.

A adviser to the Ukrainian interior ministry said that Flight 17, a Boeing 777, had been shot down over a town in the east of the country, The Associated Press reported. Pro-Russian separatists have been fighting Ukrainian security forces in that region for months.

The adviser, Anton Gerashenko, said on his Facebook page that the plane was flying at 33,000 feet when it was hit by a missile fired from a launcher known as a Buk. A similar launcher was seen by Associated Press journalists near the eastern Ukrainian town of Snizhne earlier Thursday.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Twitter: “I am shocked by reports that an MH plane crashed. We are launching an immediate investigation.”

The Malaysian defense minister, Hishammuddin Hussein, said that there was no confirmation that the plane had been shot down. He said on Twitter that the Malaysian military had been instructed to “get on it.”

President Barack Obama was briefed and directed his team to be in close touch with senior Ukrainian officials, press secretary Josh Earnest said. Officials at the Pentagon scrambled to learn more and assess who might have had the capability to shoot down an airliner.

Eastern Ukraine is among the most volatile regions in the world.

In February, protesters toppled the pro-Russian government in Kiev, and Russia answered by invading and later annexing the Crimean peninsula of Ukraine. Since then, pro-Russian separatists have fought Ukrainian security forces in the east.

Evan Kohlmann, an NBC News terrorism analyst, said that shooting down a 777 at 33,000 feet would require “access to serious military equipment.”

“The chances this was done by a conventional terrorist group like al Qaeda or something like that is almost nonexistent,” he said.

A Ukrainian military cargo plane was shot down earlier this week, but it was not clear who shot it down.

The FlightStats website showed the last recorded position of Flight 17 over Ukraine, west of the Russia border, at about 9:20 a.m. ET.
 

Foobio

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Flown over or near that airspace several times. Several countries in that area require about a 10 min "heads up we're headed your way can we come in" radio call before you are permitted entry into their airspace. The Ukraine is not one of them (although there are now restricted zones) and it would never occur to me that a SAM would be launched if you didn't follow proper procedure anyway. Maybe getting yelled at on the radio at best or a fighter intercept at worst.

But obviously these are just scumbag animals playing with daddy Putin's display of manhood so this all means nothing.
 
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